First published online: 13 March 2020The starting point of this article is the observation that thousands of enslaved people escaped bondage and managed to find refuge in the city of Baltimore between 1800 and 1860. There, they integrated into a large free black community. Given the use of the term "urban marronage" to categorize slave flight to cities in some historical literature, this chapter discusses the concept of marronage and its applicability to the urban context of antebellum Baltimore. It examines individual escapees from slavery, the communities they joined, and the broader slaveholding society to emphasize that the interplay and mutual relations of all three should be considered when assessing the applicability of this concept....
A stereotypical image of manumission is that of a benign plantation owner freeing his slaves on his ...
This article examines examples of slave revolt, legal abolition, and post-emancipation developments...
My dissertation explores the development of policing and slavery in two early nineteenth-century Atl...
Published online: September 2022Viola Franziska Müller examines runaways who camouflaged themselves ...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
© 2004 SAGE PublicationsThe Mississippi River system was an important site of African American resis...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
This article re-examines the 1860 census for Savannah Georgia. It melds the free and slave census to...
Runaways and Slave Culture in South Carolina Rather than assuming a simplistic correspondence betwe...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This article explores the figure of the ‘migrant slave’ that appears to conjoin antithetical notions...
slaves who successfully escaped British plantations in South Carolina. The Florida government offere...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
A stereotypical image of manumission is that of a benign plantation owner freeing his slaves on his ...
This article examines examples of slave revolt, legal abolition, and post-emancipation developments...
My dissertation explores the development of policing and slavery in two early nineteenth-century Atl...
Published online: September 2022Viola Franziska Müller examines runaways who camouflaged themselves ...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
© 2004 SAGE PublicationsThe Mississippi River system was an important site of African American resis...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
This article re-examines the 1860 census for Savannah Georgia. It melds the free and slave census to...
Runaways and Slave Culture in South Carolina Rather than assuming a simplistic correspondence betwe...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This article explores the figure of the ‘migrant slave’ that appears to conjoin antithetical notions...
slaves who successfully escaped British plantations in South Carolina. The Florida government offere...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
A stereotypical image of manumission is that of a benign plantation owner freeing his slaves on his ...
This article examines examples of slave revolt, legal abolition, and post-emancipation developments...
My dissertation explores the development of policing and slavery in two early nineteenth-century Atl...